Printer Friendly
The Free Library
4,488,626 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

ELISA SIGHICELLI.


The Turin-born, London-based photographer Elisa Sighicelli looks for signs of the numinous in empty and desultory spaces. For her recent series "Santiago

Santiago, city, Chile

Santiago (säntēä`gō), city (1990 est. pop. 4,395,000), central Chile, capital of Chile and of Metropolitana de Santiago region, on the Mapocho River.
" (all works 2000), she visited Santiago de Compostela, the most important pilgrimage site in Spain, but pointedly ignored the more famous and crowded landmarks. Instead, she photographed apartments that are usually rented out to students, but which were then uninhabited. Through a meticulous orchestration of light, she dramatized these dowdy, limbolike spaces.

Sighicelli's photographs are almost all square in format and mounted on light boxes. However, most of the reverse side of each transparency is covered over, so that the backlighting is confined to specific zones. This works to haunting effect in Santiago: Table, where a round dining table, covered in two orangey-brown tablecloths, has been photographed from near floor level, so that it looms up before us, filling the top half of the picture. It stands in front of an open French window a predominantly gray room, cutting out most of the daylight. There is, however, a slight gap at the bottom of the tablecloth, just above the floor, where light floods in. As a result, the table appears to float on an orange pool, whose glow is intensified by backlighting. This interior luminosity luminosity, in astronomy, the rate at which energy of all types is radiated by an object in all directions. A star's luminosity depends on its size and its temperature, varying as the square of the radius and the fourth power of the absolute surface temperature. The sun is a medium-sized star with a luminosity of 3.8×1033 ergs per sec. The luminosities of other stars are commonly expressed in terms of the sun's luminosity. transforms it into a mysterious object that almost looks more like a lampshade or a tent than a table.

Sighicelli seems to want to imbue this object with the sort of gravitas and metaphorical richness that Mario Merz gives his igloos igloo (ĭg`l) [Inuit,=house]. The Eskimos traditionally had three types of houses. A summer house, which was basically a tent, a winter house, which was usually partially dug into the ground and covered with earth; and a snow or ice house.. The table--viewed from floor level--is both inviting and threatening. It is a refuge (somewhere cozy we might be tempted to crawl under) and a sentinel, shrouded yet strangely animate, seeming to block any movement through the window. Sighicelli's technique of using artificial light to rupture and intensify particular areas recalls Merz's deployment of shaped neon tubes and spotlights.

In another image, Santiago: Tablecloth, we are transported onto the top of a round table and we gaze across a roughly woven tablecloth toward a French window veiled by a net curtain. It could well be the same table in the same room as in Santiago: Table. But tantalizingly, we seem to be no closer to the outside world here than in the other picture. The camera has been placed almost at the same level as the tablecloth, giving us a worm's-eye view. Every detail of the stitching is seen in bumpy close-up (a strategy that recalls the paintings of Italian Pop artist Domenico Gnoli). The change of scale feels vertiginous ver·tig·i·nous (vr-tj-n, as though we were suddenly stranded on the surface of the moon.

We cannot tell whether these interiors are more like monastic retreats or prison cells--or both. The closest we get to company is in an unexhibited work from the series, Santiago Bedroom, where we glimpse some dazzling white shirts hung upside down to dry on a washing line outside the window. These limp tokens of human presence serve only to remind us of the room's--and, by implication, our own--nakedness.
COPYRIGHT 2001 Artforum International Magazine, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2001, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Title Annotation:art exhibition
Author:Hall, James
Publication:Artforum International
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Jan 1, 2001
Words:497
Previous Article:"AUSSENDIENST".(art exhibition)(Brief Article)
Next Article:DONALD MOFFETT.(art exhibition)(Brief Article)
Topics:



Related Articles
BitStreams.(multimedia art exhibition at Whitney Museum of American Art)(Brief Article)
BodySpace.(minimal art exhibition at Museum of Art)(Brief Article)
Public Offerings.(art exhibition at Museum of Contemporary Art)(Brief Article)
Festivities.(FotoFest, Houston, Texas)
Submit papers. (Etc.).
Elisa Sighicelli. (Reviews).(photographique/painting exhibition Cohan, Leslie and Browne, New York)(Brief Article)
Subject index.
ICP announces Triennial exhibition.(International Center of Photography)
Skirball Center for the Performing Arts.(New and Notable)(to present a work by choreographer Elisa Monte)(Brief Article)
Plato's cave.(Baltimore Museum of Art, Contemporary Arts Center)(art exhibitions)

Terms of use | Copyright © 2008 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles